

"It can always be worse" are words that have helped me through miles of ankle-deep muddy trails in the Antarctica Marathon and a 50-mile jungle trek with red biting ant and leeches in the jungles of Borneo. Wind), use a mindful mantra to keep things in perspective and avoid getting sucked into a negativity loop. If you use your energy to fight the wind, you burn through mental and physical energy at a rate so fast you can end up in the bite-me zone by mile 12.

We tend to compare our race times for the same course year to year, but like comparing apples to oranges it just doesn't match up.

A good rule to follow in racing (and life) is to go with what the day gives you. Pacing a point-to-point course like Grandma's is a unique challenge, especially if you have a headwind to deal with along the way. Do you have any suggestions for pacing? Thanks. It looks like we may have a significant wind to contend with at Grandma's Marathon this weekend.
